Slow_boat
Well-Known Member
The first 'big boat' I owned was a Vivacity 20. I spent a year re-building one, launched and swmbo came out once, then proclaimed that there was no way she and teenaged daughter would be going for a fortnights cruise in that little thing. They wanted standing headroom, a seperate heads, seperate fore cabin, inboard engine, proper galley. When I asked what I was expected to do in the 6 weeks available before the holiday she said 'Best get a bigger boat, hadn't we?'
So I sold a motorbike and we bought a Macwester 26
After a couple of years smbo wanted a bigger, faster, more modern boat we could cross the north sea in and take rougher weather, with an oven, and a sink you can stand at, and a heads you can stand up in and and and..... So we sold the house and bought a Sadler 29.
Now she wants a catamaran................
The point I'm trying to make is that while years ago the family holiday was to load wife and kids in a sidecar with a tent and spend a week camping in Cornish rain, people demand more these days. They're not willing to 'rough it' a bit. That and the easily available credit until a year or two ago meant folk would go straight for a 30' plus boat and don't see the point in an 'appreticeship' sailing dinghies and getting bigger and bigger boats when they could afford to buy or build one, or gaining experience crewing other peoples boats.
Whether that is a good thing or not is another discussion.
So I sold a motorbike and we bought a Macwester 26
After a couple of years smbo wanted a bigger, faster, more modern boat we could cross the north sea in and take rougher weather, with an oven, and a sink you can stand at, and a heads you can stand up in and and and..... So we sold the house and bought a Sadler 29.
Now she wants a catamaran................
The point I'm trying to make is that while years ago the family holiday was to load wife and kids in a sidecar with a tent and spend a week camping in Cornish rain, people demand more these days. They're not willing to 'rough it' a bit. That and the easily available credit until a year or two ago meant folk would go straight for a 30' plus boat and don't see the point in an 'appreticeship' sailing dinghies and getting bigger and bigger boats when they could afford to buy or build one, or gaining experience crewing other peoples boats.
Whether that is a good thing or not is another discussion.